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Washington, DC – U.S. PIRG and other members of Americans for Financial Reform are urging the House of Representatives to reject three proposed bills designed to defang and delay the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB).

“American consumers, including senior citizens and military servicemembers, need the CFPB to protect them from the unfair financial practices that triggered the financial collapse in 2008,” said U.S. PIRG consumer program director Ed Mierzwinski. “The Wall Street banks are pushing these bills, even though it was their unchecked practices that wrecked the economy and left millions of consumers without homes, millions more without jobs, and caused a loss of trillions of dollars in retirement savings.”

The first bill, HR 1121, from full committee chairman Spencer Bachus (AL), would eliminate the CFPB’s director and replace it with a weaker 5-member commission. “A commission was considered and rejected by the Congress a year ago,” said Mierzwinski. “But proposing it again less than 80 days before the new bureau starts work is nothing less than purposely throwing a wrench in its works.”

The second bill, HR 1315, from Rep. Sean Duffy (WI), “turns an already-existing and unique veto power of other regulators over CFPB decisions into a virtual rubber stamp for the bureau’s opponents,” according to Mierzwinski. “And the yet-to-be-introduced proposal from subcommittee chairwoman Shelley Moore Capito (WV) to delay the July 21 date until a director is in place leaves consumers with the same failed regulators we had before.”

"Professor Warren is correct,” concluded Mierzwinski. “These industry-backed bills are designed to stop the agency from doing its only job – protecting consumers. Congress should reject these wrong-headed proposals.”

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U.S. PIRG, the federation of state Public Interest Research Groups, is a non-profit, non-partisan public interest advocacy organization. For more information, visit http://www.uspirg.org. For more on U.S. PIRG’s Wall Street Reform Campaign, click here. Follow us on Twitter.